Choosing your first prompts
Overview
The first prompt set should reflect the questions that shape real buyer understanding, not just the phrases that sound interesting internally.
This article is here to help your team make progress on Choosing your first prompts in a way that stays practical, easy to share internally, and aligned with how GeoSnake is meant to support AI visibility work.
When this matters
- Use this article when your team is setting up choosing your first prompts for the first time and wants a clean, confidence-building start.
- Early setup should stay narrow enough to learn from, but useful enough to support a real review meeting.
- The goal of onboarding is not to track everything at once. The goal is to make the first few decisions easier and faster.
Recommended setup steps
- Start with branded prompts that mention the company directly.
- Add category prompts where new buyers may discover you.
- Include a few comparison prompts tied to your strongest competitors.
- Keep the list narrow enough that the team can actually review it weekly.
What good looks like
A good first setup feels focused rather than exhaustive. The team knows what it is tracking, why it matters, who will review it, and what kind of action the first scan is expected to support. That is what turns onboarding into momentum.
Helpful tips
- Good prompts are commercially relevant and action-friendly.
- Fewer high-value prompts beat a long generic list.
- Keep wording stable if you want trend data to stay meaningful.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Trying to make the first setup perfect instead of making it usable.
- Skipping weekly review habits and assuming the dashboard alone will create action.
- Inviting a broad team before the first scan and workflow are clearly defined.
Next step
After you finish this step, move immediately to the next highest-value setup action instead of pausing the process. The best onboarding journeys keep momentum from workspace setup all the way to the first useful team discussion.
